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22.1: Introduction

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    25258
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    From New York City to Chicago, Venezuela to Lima, … rooftop gardens and urban vegetable patches are growing fresh food close to the people.

    National Geographic

    When most people think about where food is grown, their vision is usually of farms, large and small, in rural regions. The majority of these farms have been in agriculture for decades or longer, and they have never been used for significant residential, commercial or industrial purposes in their past. But in towns and cities around the country, there is a rapidly growing interest in urban food production, from school and community gardens to nonprofit and commercial urban farms. Similarly, urban green spaces, street trees and backyard gardens provide important relief from dense urbanized environments and have proven to be important to city dwellers’ overall wellbeing.

    Managing soils on urban farms and green spaces is in some ways similar to managing them on rural farms. For example, there is a need to provide adequate water and nutrients to the soil, and to ensure that the pH is balanced, just as with rural agricultural soils. Another similarity is that a main source of soil degradation in urban areas is compaction from lost organic matter and traffic (construction activities, vehicles, pedestrians, etc.).

    However, in other ways, managing urban soils is quite different. Urban lands often have gone through any number of residential, commercial or industrial uses in the past, and this land-use history presents unique challenges to the aspiring urban farmer or gardener. Because of their history, urban soils intended for food production often start off in poor shape: they are usually compacted and with low organic matter content, low nutrient availability, and low biological activity and diversity. But unlike soils on rural farms, contamination by toxic compounds is one of the greatest challenges facing urban food growers, and it must be addressed before food can be safely grown and marketed in local communities. This chapter explores the primary challenges you are likely to encounter when preparing urban soils for food production, and it outlines strategies for making these soils both productive and safe to human health. Also, we will discuss challenges with establishing and maintaining urban green infrastructure like parks, street trees and ornamental gardens.


    This page titled 22.1: Introduction is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Fred Magdoff & Harold van Es (Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) program) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.